What 4 agriculture objects made America?

What four agriculture items should show up on a list of the 101 most important objects in American history?

Probably not the four selected by Smithsonian in its “101 Objects That Made America.” But if you guessed cotton gin, John Deere plow, Cesar Chavez’s jacket, and two bottles of Napa wine — you nailed it. The choices — fact or folly — are included in Smithsonian’s November issue. With 137 million objects in 19 museums and research centers to choose from, Smithsonian distilled the American story into 101 artifacts and the resulting list is filled with the expected and the dubious — ranging from the Appomattox table and chairs to Andy Warhol’s portrait of Michael Jackson.

Right or wrong, the four selections pulled from U.S. agricultural history:

Eli Whitney’s game changer “could separate white cotton fiber from its sticky green seeds, processing 50 pounds of cotton a day, 10 times as much as doing it by hand. Excited planters quickly seeded entire fields with the crop.”

However, Whitney lived the ultimate nightmare of invention: his gin was too simple and he served as the guinea pig for a primitive U.S. patent office. For farmers with enough mechanical know-how, Whitney’s patent was only a bother. By the time he received validation of his gin patent in 1807, the money brought in only countered his losses from years of litigation.

“… one of the Smithsonian’s most prized objects … The genius of blacksmith Deere’s innovation was to discard the cast-iron moldboard — the blade — from the traditional plow of the rocky farm fields of the East, and replace it with a dynamically curved moldboard of wrought iron or steel.”

America wins the “Judgement of Paris” in 1976 and the California wine industry explodes, 330 wineries in 1975; 3,754 wineries in 2012.

The list also included general history pieces that few would argue with: Lewis and Clark’s compass, Bell’s telephone, Appomattox table and chairs, Wright Flyer, Colt revolver, Edison light bulb, Kodak camera, Morse telegraph, and a Model T.

Lists are tailor-made for controversy and this one is no different. Not many people in agriculture would agree with all four of the Smithsonian’s ag choices, but many non-ag choices seemed ludicrous at best: Michael Jordan’s Bulls jersey, a Walt Whitman photograph, a Wonder Woman comic, a modernist style Eames Chair ……… and of course, R2-D2.